Awwww yeah, those suckers at the TSA are going to let us take knives on planes again. Pocket knives are the best. Get one. Here are some suggestions—all plane-legal as of April 25th.

Buck Chairman Series Companion

The two-blade craft knife, aka pen knife, is a classic. A larger workhorse blade paired with a smaller one that's great for detail work—like fine whittling or cleaning your nails. I have one like this, and I carry it every day. $33 [Amazon]

Swiss Army Money Clip Knife

Pulltap Double-Hinge Corkscrew

Any waiter will tell you that the double-pull corkscrew is king of the wine openers. What's that you say? That's not a knife and it doesn't count? Tell it to your Swiss dream girl, sitting impatiently on an Alpine hillside as you try to open a bottle of wine with a shoe. Let's just take a moment and be thankful that the airport goons won't be confiscating these anymore. $7 [Amazon]

Kershaw Rainbow Chive

OMG look at this knife! It's a crazy rainbow shiv! The crazy color is actually a result of the super durable titanium dioxide coating, which makes the blade resistant to scratches and stains. So it'll always look like this. Oh, and it uses Kershaw's wicked assisted opening mechanism, which snaps the blade open faster than whoa. You kinda can't believe it's legal. In fact, a disclaimer: Couldn't find exact specs on this thing's blade width, so we're not 100-percent certain you'll legally be able to take this thing on a plane. The blade is 1 15/16 long, which means it's probably skinny enough, but please measure before you try to board a jet. $55 [Amazon]

Swisscard Lite

If you don't have an American Express card, this could be the most useful thing in your wallet. The Swisscard Lite won a Red Dot design award, and you can see why. There's a knife, scissors, screwdriver, pen, tweezers (of course), and a flashlight packed into an itty bitty thing that fits in a credit card slot. Genius. One word of caution: If you're a wallet-in-the-back-pocket type, you will break this thing (like I did). Keep it in your bag or something. Still worth it. $48 [Amazon]

Gerber Aritfact

It is entirely possible that the TSA's boxcutter prohibition will make this knife a no-no, but that doesn't mean you shouldn't take it on a plane—its blade is removable, so if the agent gives you any guff, just take the blade off and throw it out. The artifact uses standard #11 hobby knife blades, so you can just pick up a replacement at any art supply store. Even without the cutting edge, this thing is incredibly useful, with a bottle opener, pry bar, bottle opener, bit drivers, bottle opener... $8 [Amazon]

Schrade Mighty Mite

It is not easy to find a lock-blade knife that meets the TSA's specs—mostly it's the blade width that's the problem—but the Mighty Mite does. Real talk: This is not a connoisseur-quality knife. It's made out of cheap steel and plastic. But for a knife this small—and cheap!—does it really matter? For opening packages, whittling sticks, and various other small-blade tasks, you'll probably just be happy this little guy's blade stays locked open and won't close on your fingers. $12 [Amazon]